We've made it really easy for you by taking all the great info from CareerBuilder's 2016 U. S. Job Forecast and condensing it down to six key takeaways you need to know about in the coming months. So put down those barbells, TV remotes, quilted coats and kale-cinnamon smoothies and listen up.

Here are six highlights of what's ahead for hiring:

1.Full-time, permanent hiring is holding steady, and customer service is hot.Thirty-six percent of employers plan to add full-time, permanent employees in 2016, the same as 2015.

"On average, the U.S. has added 200,000 jobs each month over the last two years, and we expect 2016 to produce similar results, if not better," says CareerBuilder CEO Matt Ferguson.

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2.The skills gap is opening new doors for low-skill workers.More than half (63 percent) of employers say they are concerned with a growing skills gap, and 48 percent report extended vacancies within their organizations. Thirty-three percent of employers plan to hire low-skill workers and invest in training them for high-skill jobs in 2016.

3. STEM hiring seeds are being planted sooner. To encourage the next generation of workers to pursue STEM-related fields (science, technology, engineering and math), employers are building relationships with students at an early age. One quarter of employers (25 percent)plan to hire high school students as interns over the next 12 months.

4. Wages are rising to keep up with increasing competition for talent.

In an effort to retain and attract top performers, 83 percent of employers plan to increase compensation for existing employees – on par with 82 percent last year, while 66 percent will offer higher starting salaries for new employees – up from 64 percent last year.

5. There is a push for diversity in leadership: Companies are expanding demographics in their company leadership. Fifty-five percent of employers plan to hire or promote more women for management roles, and 53 percent plan to do the same for diverse workers. Forty-seven percent of employers plan to promote workers under the age of 30 into management roles.

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6. U.S. employers will look globally to fill labor gaps. Employers will continue to look at talent pools outside the U.S. to help fill labor deficits. Nearly 1 in 5 (19 percent) say they will hire workers with H-1B visas in 2016, which enables them to temporarily employ foreign-born workers for specialized occupations.